Ethan calmly announces his immediate resignation as head of operations, citing a clause in his employment agreement that allows him to leave if his role is changed because of family conflict. When his father accuses him of sabotaging the company, Ethan explains that he has simply followed the legal process and fulfilled his obligation to report serious compliance concerns to the board.
Daniel Price, a trusted employee of eighteen years, confirms Ethan’s claims by revealing that Ethan had already sent evidence—including altered invoices, payment approvals, shipment reports, and system logs—to the board, outside legal counsel, and independent directors. Ethan also privately informed the company’s bank and two largest clients, as required by their contracts, about falsified performance reports.
The situation becomes even more serious when Daniel exposes that Madison approved three payments totaling $186,400 to Northline Support Services, a company that had been dissolved years earlier. Madison insists she was unaware, but Ethan points out that he only uncovered the fake vendor rather than creating the problem, leaving their father shocked and unable to defend her.
Moments later, the company lawyer receives notice that the bank wants an urgent meeting with the board, and auditors arrive after being invited by the independent directors. Retired Judge Elaine Mercer announces that Ethan’s father, Robert, is immediately removed from financial oversight until the investigation is complete, leaving him speechless as he realizes he has lost control of both the company and his family.